The Pennsylvania Supreme Court is sitting in Harrisburg for this week’s round of oral arguments and is scheduled on Tuesday to hear oral arguments in the case of Scarnati v. Wolf, a case taken over by the current governor concerning gubernatorial authority to line-item veto portions of budget-related legislation like the Fiscal Code.

The case stems from actions taken by then-Gov. Tom Corbett in signing the 2014 budget bills, in which he line-item vetoed a number of items in the state budget and the accompanying Fiscal Code legislation.

Pennsylvania started the process of complying with the federal REAL ID Act Wednesday with the Senate Communications and Technology Committee advancing legislation to repeal Act 38 of 2012 and asking the US Department of Homeland Security for another extension of time to allow Pennsylvania to develop a compliant identification card.

Passed in 2005, the REAL ID Act requires states to adopt specific, nationwide standards for state-issued driver’s licenses and ID cards in order to strengthen immigration enforcement and boost homeland security.

Administrative errors and poor decision-making within the Department of Labor and Industry have caused Pennsylvania’s unemployment compensation system to lose out on past federal funding, a recent internal investigation by the Wolf administration revealed.

Though Auditor General Eugene DePasquale announced last month that his office would be conducting an audit of the UC system under the department and the associated Service Improvement Infrastructure Fund (SIIF) at the heart of a dispute between the Wolf administration and Senate Republicans, the Wolf administration had taken upon itself to conduct a parallel internal review, according to a letter sent by Budget Sec. Randy Albright to the Auditor General on Friday.

According to the letter, that internal review found two critical errors within the department that have caused the UC system to lose out on millions of dollars in federal funding.

The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board Wednesday denied a petition by Louis DeNaples, the one-time owner of Mt. Airy Casino, to have board-placed restrictions on his ability to do business with the casino removed and limit the scope of a background check so businesses he owns can serve as a vendor to the casino.

While the petition to remove the restrictions and limit the background check received a majority vote, it did not receive a “qualified majority vote,” which consists of at least one gubernatorial appointee of the board and all four legislative appointees voting in favor of a particular matter.

Board Chairman William Ryan and Commissioner Annmarie Kaiser voted against DeNaples’s petition. Both were appointees of Gov. Tom Corbett.

Richard Jewell, a June 2015 appointment of House Speaker Mike Turzai (R-Allegheny), was the dissenting legislative appointee.